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Ontario Pension Giant May Be Getting the Memo on Fossil Divestment, Members Say

August 11, 2022
Reading time: 4 minutes
Full Story: Corporate Knights @corporateknight
Primary Author: Paul Burns, Aislinn Clancy, Melissa Rosato

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As the burning of fossil fuels presents us with yet another summer of catastrophic impacts, the pressure is growing for pension funds to either phase out their oil, gas, coal, and pipeline assets or explain how they’re aligned with a safe retirement future for their beneficiaries. And Canada’s seventh-largest fund, the C$121-billion Ontario Municipal Employees’ Retirement System (OMERS), may be getting the memo, three of its members write for Corporate Knights.

OMERS, the pension fund for half a million municipal employees, announced in July that it’s selling its stake in the largest gas-fired cogeneration plant in the United States, report retired municipal worker Paul Burns, school social worker Aislinn Clancy, and environmental communicator Melissa Rosato. The sale marks the third time in the last year that OMERS has divested a major fossil fuel asset.

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Since late 2021, OMERS has announced it would sell its 25% stake in Scotia Gas Networks (SGN), the second-largest gas distribution network in the United Kingdom, as well as its 80% joint stake in GNL Quintero, Chile’s largest fossil gas import terminal. Meanwhile, regulatory filings show OMERS has reduced its holdings in publicly traded fossil fuel companies by three million shares, or about 17%, since June 30, 2021.

As pension plan members, the three authors say they’ve been asking OMERS to either demonstrate how its fossil fuel assets have credible decarbonization pathways or divest them. And they say OMERS might finally be listening.

The climate crisis is already costing lives and wreaking havoc around the world. Oil and gas companies and infrastructure don’t have a profitable financial future or a credible, science-based decarbonization pathway in a world that must rapidly phase out fossil fuels. Continuing such investments increases the risk of asset stranding, locks in carbon pollution, and heightens the risk of catastrophic global heating outcomes.

The long-term investment calculus for fossil fuel assets has changed as the cost of renewable energy plummets, governments and companies commit to net-zero emissions, and countries become increasingly aware that a reliance on fossil fuels is a threat to energy security. At least four Canadian pension funds own stakes in assets that transport gas from Russia, and all must be nervously eyeing the changing risk and return calculation as the war in Ukraine continues. In OMERS’ case, portfolio company NET4GAS was downgraded by Fitch Ratings based on the threat (now realized) of Russia restricting its flow of gas, along with Europe’s determination to reduce its reliance on said gas.

Fossil fuel assets are at increasing risk of becoming stranded in a world getting serious about climate action. To limit global heating to 1.5°C, 40% of developed reserves of fossil fuels must stay in the ground, and some fossil fuel assets need to be retired early. A company with unextractable oil and gas reserves, or the infrastructure built to transport them, can’t generate the long-term returns on which a pension fund relies, and it may need to be sold at a loss when markets realize its products are incompatible with a stable climate.

Financial regulators in Canada and elsewhere warn that the fossil-fueled climate crisis threatens the stability of the global economy and financial system. There is no safe place for our pensions to invest our savings if the climate crisis spirals out of control.

OMERS is no doubt aware of the growing calls for fossil fuel phaseout from its members and employers. Beneficiaries and labour stakeholders have written to the fund requesting that it account for its fossil fuel investments. Municipalities including Toronto, Kingston, and Brampton have passed motions urging the fund to phase out fossil fuels.

We’ve felt some optimism about OMERS’ significant investments in energy storage, battery efficiency, and renewable energy platforms. We welcomed OMERS’ commitment to net-zero emissions across its portfolio by 2050, but that is just a first step. Without OMERS committing to align its portfolio with a safe climate, we’re left wondering what kind of future we’ll face in retirement. OMERS needs to strengthen its short- and mid-term climate commitments, restrict any new investment in fossil fuels, and set a deadline by which it will phase out investments without a credible decarbonization pathway.

Putting our pension savings and our planet on the road to climate safety requires immediate action to halve greenhouse gas emissions this decade. We don’t see how oil, gas and pipelines fit into a plan to do that… and we’re glad OMERS is starting to see that, too.

This story originally appeared on Corporate Knights. Republished with permission.



in Canada, Climate Action / "Blockadia", Coal, Finance & Investment, International Security & War, Oil & Gas, Pipelines / Rail Transport, Sub-National Governments

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